Because Not All DISASTER MOVIES CONTAIN EXPLOSIONS
New York magazine|December 6-19, 2021
Ciao! Manhattan set out to capture Warhol’s New York underground and instead became a symbol of its demise.
HEIDI JULAVITS
Because Not All DISASTER MOVIES CONTAIN EXPLOSIONS

’CIAO! MANHATTAN,’ made between 1967 and 1972 by current or newly expelled members of Andy Warhol’s Factory, featuring cameos by Warhol Superstars and countercultural icons like Allen Ginsberg, and funded, in turn, by a furrier and a rumored marijuana entrepreneur, is, by objective measures, a disaster movie. It involves no earthquakes, tsunamis, or meteor strikes. But the film and the making of it—the distinction is spurious—involve disappearances, hospitalizations, incarcerations, and death. It wouldn’t exist at all had it not been charismatically bullied into being by its co-director David Weisman, a man described by one collaborator as a “full-on pirate.”

Shot at first in black-and-white, Ciao! Manhattan was conceived as a quasi-cinéma-vérité portrait of the ’60s underground lifestyle seen through Edie Sedgwick, one of the Factory’s most mesmerizing collaborators (or commodities), but later moved to California to become about the bleak aftermath of drug abuse and fleeting “downtown” celebrity, shot in color.

This story is from the December 6-19, 2021 edition of New York magazine.

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This story is from the December 6-19, 2021 edition of New York magazine.

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